Discontinuous Cell Method (DCM) for the Simulation of Cohesive Fracture and Fragmentation of Continuous Media
Gianluca Cusatis, Roozbeh Rezakhani, Edward A. Schauffert

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Discontinuous Cell Method (DCM), a novel computational approach for simulating cohesive fracture and fragmentation in solids, overcoming mesh dependency issues of traditional methods.
Contribution
The paper presents DCM, a new discretization technique using Voronoi tessellations for fracture simulation, with validation against classical finite element methods and application to complex fracture problems.
Findings
DCM accurately simulates cohesive crack propagation.
The method effectively handles crack branching and fragmentation.
It mitigates mesh dependency issues in fracture modeling.
Abstract
In this paper, the Discontinuous Cell Method (DCM) is formulated with the objective of simulating cohesive fracture propagation and fragmentation in homogeneous solids without issues relevant to excessive mesh deformation typical of available Finite Element formulations. DCM discretizes solids by using the Delaunay triangulation and its associated Voronoi tessellation giving rise to a system of discrete cells interacting through shared facets. For each Voronoi cell, the displacement field is approximated on the basis of rigid body kinematics, which is used to compute a strain vector at the centroid of the Voronoi facets. Such strain vector is demonstrated to be the projection of the strain tensor at that location. At the same point stress tractions are computed through vectorial constitutive equations derived on the basis of classical continuum tensorial theories. Results of analysis of…
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